1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an insulating glass element for at least partial delimitation of a combustion chamber, having at least two viewing panes, which include in at least some areas a transparent glass or ceramic-glass material and which are spaced apart from each other while leaving an air chamber, and a viewing area is created at least in parts of the air chamber.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Insulating glass elements are used in connection with space heating devices, for example fireplaces, and other combustion installations, for example garbage-burning installations, pyrolysis furnaces, crematoria and the like, or also in ovens, for example as the oven door. They permit the user to view the combustion chamber. In the process, an insulating effect is achieved by the multi-pane construction.
A door for an oven is known from United Kingdom Patent Reference GB 1,087,296. It has two viewing panes, which extend parallel with respect to each other and are kept apart by spacing elements. Internal air can circulate in the air chamber thus formed and is heated while passing through the air chamber and aids in heating the chamber.
A door system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,058,107, which also has two viewing panes with spacing devices. The door frame contains a number of ventilating openings, both in the lower as well as the upper holding strip, so that the air heated in the space between the panes can move by convection and supply the operating space with warm air.
United States Patent Reference 2004 00 11 348 A1 describes a double-pane construction, which also defines a space between both viewing panes. However, the viewing panes are not arranged parallel to each other, but are constructed so that the gap at the upper end of the viewing panes is reduced. A blower additionally blows either room air or fresh air into the space between the panes, in particular for cooling the inner viewing panes, to achieve a temperature load under which prestressed soda-lime glass can be safely employed.
Finally, United States Patent Reference 2005/01 39 209 A2 goes still one step further, as described in United States Patent Reference 2004 00 11 348, where air is moved by convection, either without being forced, or with the aid of a blower, between the viewing panes. The outer viewing pane is replaced by a plastic pane. Electrical energy is required for operating the blower, which worsens the energy balance.
With known insulating glass elements, dust, and depending on the respective construction, soot, collects between the viewing panes, so that regular cleaning is required. Thus, respectively one of the viewing panes would have to be removably integrated in a holder. With only a small cost outlay, this is not possible with the known systems. Also, this requires an elaborate frame structure for the insulating glass element. In case of flare-ups in the combustion chamber, the viewing panes are subjected to large stresses. The forces thus created in case of a flare-up are transmitted via the spacing elements from the inner to the outer viewing pane. During this, pressure peaks are generated in the area of the spacing elements. In order to reduce these safely, the individual viewing panes must have sufficient strength, and therefore sufficient thickness.
One disadvantage regarding emission characteristics of the combustion location can be noted in connection with the known insulating glass elements. The viewing pane facing the combustion location is cooled by the circulating air. The generation of nitric oxide, for example, is aided at the inside of the cooled inner pane, which contributes to the worsening of the waste gas characteristics. Also, the combustion temperature is limited by cooling the inner pane, which leads to an increase in fine dust emissions.
It is one object of this invention to provide an insulating glass element of the type mentioned above but which contributes to improved emission characteristics of the combustion location and is easy to clean in the process.
This object is attained with two viewing panes that are connected with each other by a temperature-resistant adhesive. The adhesive encloses a viewing area of the viewing panes all around, or a spacing element, which runs around them at least partially, is connected with the two viewing panes in a material-to-material manner, preferably glued to it.
Thus, this invention can have a permanent connection of two or several viewing panes by an adhesive to form a fixed composite pane. Thus, the insulating glass element can be manipulated as a structural unit and can be simply installed in the same way as a single pane. In the process, the sealing of the insulating glass element in a surrounding frame, for example a door frame, clearly becomes simpler. It is possible to omit the otherwise required sealing layers between the individual panes which increases the options for the design of the door frame. In particular, it now can be designed with a reduced structural depth. Because the frame can be made with a reduced structural size according to this invention, savings in material and a reduction in weight also results.
Because of the gluing, the insulating glass element forms a component of great stiffness, so that it is the bearing element of a door. A frame can then possibly be omitted, in which case the hinges and locking elements are directly connected with the insulating glass element, or a frame is employed which provides a connection with the hinges and the locking elements. It is also possible to employ viewing panes of lesser thickness, which leads to further weight and material savings, along with sufficient stability.
Because the adhesive encloses the viewing area all around, a dustproof seal is formed, so that the air chamber remains permanently clean. Regular cleaning can thus be omitted.
Also, the adhesive delimits an insulating air volume in the air chamber. The emission characteristics are thus positively affected because higher combustion temperatures are created in the combustion chamber.
Another object of this invention is to provide the connection of the two viewing panes with a spacing element which is arranged in the area between the viewing panes and can be glued together with them. The spacing element and the adhesive layers again provides a dust-proof and soot-proof sealing of the air chamber. The spacing element also improves the load distribution between the pane parts, and also stiffens them.
In one embodiment of this invention, the viewing panes are glued together by an adhesive on the basis of waterglass inserted between them. This adhesive is sufficiently temperature-resistant even under large thermal loads. The adhesive can be filled, for example, with low-expansion fillers, such as quartz meal, which leads to a reduction in thermal expansion. This can be important when using zero-expansion glass-ceramic elements as the pane material in order to prevent the formation of cracks and to guarantee a long-term resistance to temperature changes.
If the cured adhesive is gas-permeable, a temperature equalization between the air chamber and the surroundings in case of temperature changes is possible. The dustproof separation of the air chamber is maintained. Gas permeability can be provided by an appropriately porous adhesive material. It is also possible to integrate a pressure-equalization element, for example a porous ceramic filter, into the adhesive layer or into the spacing element, or to assign it to the spacing element. The pressure-equalization element can form a dustproof separation.
If in one embodiment of this invention the cured adhesive is hydrophobic, it is then possible to reduce, or completely suppress, the penetration of water, in the form of a product of combustion or humidity, into the air chamber.
With an insulating glass element it is possible to achieve a clear optimization of the material, along with sufficient stability, if the viewing panes are of different thickness. The thicker viewing pane meets static requirements, which are complemented by the thinner viewing pane in a material-saving manner, and for completing the insulating glass element. Thicknesses of less than or equal to 4 mm can be realized with this construction. Defined format sizes also makes it possible to construct insulating glass elements wherein both viewing panes are of the same thickness, in particular less than or equal to 4 mm.
In another embodiment of this invention one or several viewing panes are arranged between the two outer viewing panes, and the inner viewing panes have a clearly lesser thickness than the two outer viewing panes.
The two outer panes of an insulating glass element provide sufficient stability. Each inner pane carries off no or only light mechanical loads and clearly increases the insulating effect.
This invention is explained in view of an exemplary embodiment represented in the drawings, wherein:
An insulating glass element 10 with two viewing panes 11, 12, which are spaced apart parallel in relation to each other, is represented in
The insulating glass element 10 in accordance with
On the hinge side, the vertical profiled frame sections 32 have two hinge elements 34, and a closure 33 on the catch side, for example a handle with a locking tongue.
Alternatively to the adhesive bead, it is possible to use a spacing element 21, as shown in
For constructing the spacing element, several, preferably four, profiled sections, such as profiled sections 22 and 23, are connected with each other, preferably glued, into an at least partially circumferential frame. Here, the profiled sections can be made of the same material as the viewing panes 11, 12.
German Patent Reference 10 2008 025 412.6-25, filed 27 May 2008, the priority document corresponding to this invention, to which a foreign priority benefit is claimed under Title 35, United States Code, Section 119, and its entire teachings are incorporated, by reference, into this specification.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 025 412 | May 2008 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090293381 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |